Vector interactions enlarge anisotropic surface tension of quark matter in magnetic fields, cause transverse tension to rise with B in strong fields, require moderate B for bubble formation, and slightly reduce stability.
Surface tension of hot and dense quark matter under strong magnetic fields
1 Pith paper cite this work. Polarity classification is still indexing.
abstract
We study the surface tension of hot, highly magnetized three flavor quark matter droplets, focusing specifically on the thermodynamic conditions prevailing in neutron stars, hot lepton rich protoneutron stars and neutron star mergers. We explore the role of temperature, baryon number density, trapped neutrinos, droplet size and magnetic fields within the multiple reflection expansion formalism (MRE), assuming that astrophysical quark matter can be described as a mixture of free Fermi gases composed by quarks $u$, $d$, $s$, electrons and neutrinos, in chemical equilibrium under weak interactions. We find that the total surface tension is rather unaffected by the size of the drop, but is quite sensitive to the effect of baryon number density, temperature, trapped neutrinos and magnetic fields (specially above $eB \sim 5 \times 10^{-3} \mathrm{GeV}^2$). Surface tensions parallel and transverse to the magnetic field span values up to $\sim$ 25 MeV/fm$^2$. For $T \lesssim 100$ MeV the surface tension is a decreasing function of temperature but above 100 MeV it increases monotonically with $T$. Finally, we discuss some astrophysical consequences of our results.
fields
hep-ph 1years
2026 1verdicts
UNVERDICTED 1representative citing papers
citing papers explorer
-
Anisotropic surface tension and stability of quark matter modified by the vector interaction
Vector interactions enlarge anisotropic surface tension of quark matter in magnetic fields, cause transverse tension to rise with B in strong fields, require moderate B for bubble formation, and slightly reduce stability.